Cite
269 Commercially-available inertial measurement unit underestimates number of jumps for females more than males: implications for load monitoring and injury prevention
MLA
Sagar Grewal, et al. “269 Commercially-Available Inertial Measurement Unit Underestimates Number of Jumps for Females More than Males: Implications for Load Monitoring and Injury Prevention.” Poster Presentations, Nov. 2021. EBSCOhost, https://doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2021-ioc.248.
APA
Sagar Grewal, Lauren C. Benson, Kati Pasanen, Tyler J Tait, Carlyn Stilling, Kimberley Befus, John Choi, Colin Hillson, Carolyn A. Emery, & Kerry MacDonald. (2021). 269 Commercially-available inertial measurement unit underestimates number of jumps for females more than males: implications for load monitoring and injury prevention. Poster Presentations. https://doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2021-ioc.248
Chicago
Sagar Grewal, Lauren C. Benson, Kati Pasanen, Tyler J Tait, Carlyn Stilling, Kimberley Befus, John Choi, Colin Hillson, Carolyn A. Emery, and Kerry MacDonald. 2021. “269 Commercially-Available Inertial Measurement Unit Underestimates Number of Jumps for Females More than Males: Implications for Load Monitoring and Injury Prevention.” Poster Presentations, November. doi:10.1136/bjsports-2021-ioc.248.